Yale Law School Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository Faculty Scholarship Series Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship 1996 Some Notes on the Establishment Clause Akhil Reed Amar Yale Law School Follow this and additional works at:https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/fss_papers Part of theLaw Commons Recommended Citation Amar, Akhil Reed, "Some Notes on the Establishment Clause" (1996).Faculty Scholarship Series. 997. https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/fss_papers/997 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Yale Law School Faculty Scholarship at Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Scholarship Series by an authorized administrator of Yale Law School Legal Scholarship Repository. For more information, please [email protected]. Articles Some Notes on the Establishment Clause Akhil Reed Amar* In a state formed in a struggle for religious freedom, and at a law school and university named after Roger Williams, what topic could be more appropriate for an Inaugural Lecture than the topic ofreligious liberty? My text tonight is a familiar one-the Establishment Clause ofthe FirstAmendment. Let us begin by looking carefully at these words, and pondering anew their significance: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment ofreligion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof . . . ." The Establishment Clause did more than prohibit Congress from establishing a national church. Its mandate that Congress shall make no law "'respecting' an establishment of religion" also prohibited the national legislature from interfering with, or trying to disestablish, churches established by state and local governments.! * SouthmaydProfessor,Yale LawSchool. This essayderives from theRoger Williams University Law Review's Inaugural Lecture delivered on April 19, 1996. 1. For more support and elaboration, see Edward Dumbauld, The Bill of Rights And What It Means Today 104 &n.5 (1957); 2 William Winslow Crosskey, Politics andthe Constitution inthe Historyofthe United States 1057, 1060, 1072 74 (1953); Wilbur Katz, Religion and American Constitutions 8-10 (1964); Gerard V. Bradley, Church-State Relationships in America 76, 92-95 (1987); Joseph M. Snee, Religious Disestablishment and the Fourteenth Amendment, 1954 Wash. U.L.Q. 371; Michael A. Paulsen, Religion, Equality, and the Constitution: An Equal Protection Approach to Establishment ClauseAdjudication, 61 Notre Dame L. Rev. 311, 321-23 (1986); William C. Porth & Robert P. George, Trimming the Ivy:A BicentennialRe-examination ofthe Establishment Clause, 90W. Va. L. Rev. 109, 136-39 (1987); Daniel O. Conkle, Toward a General Theory ofthe Establish ment Clause, 82 Nw. U. L. Rev. 1113, 1132-35 (1988); William K Lietzau, Redis covering the Establishment Clause: Federalism and the Rollback ofIncorporation, 39 DePaul L. Rev. 1191 (1990). 1 HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 1 1996-1997 2 ROGER WILUAMS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 2:1 In 1789, at least six states had government-supported churches. Congregationalism held sway in New Hampshire, Mas sachusetts and Connecticut under local-rule establishment schemes, while Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia each fea tured a more general form of establishment in their respective state constitutions.2 And, even in the arguably "non-establish ment" states, church and state were hardly separate; for example, at least four of these states, in their constitutions no less, barred non-Christians or non-Protestants from holding government of fice.3 According to one tally, eleven ofthe thirteen states had reli gious qualifications for officeholding.4 Interestingly, the federal Establishment Clause, as finally worded, most closely tracked the proposal from the ratifying convention ofone ofthe staunchest es tablishment states, New Hampshire: "Congress shall make no laws touching religion" - a proposal that of course would immunize New Hampshire from any attempted federal disestablishment.5 In the first Congress, Representative Samuel Livermore from New Hampshire initially won the assent ofthe House for this wording, only to lose in turn to another formulation.6 But when all the dust had settled the final version of the clause returned to its states' rights roots. In the words ofJoseph Story's celebrated Commenta ries on the Constitution, "Thus, the whole power over the subject of religion is left exclusively to the state governments .... "7 2. See Leonard W. Levy, Jefferson and Civil Liberties: The Darker Side 5 (1963); Michael W. McConnell, The Origins and Historical Understanding ofFree Exercise ofReligion, 103 Harv. L. Rev. 1409, 1437 (1990). Cf. Bradley, supra note I, at 13("[E]achofthe thirteenoriginal states generouslyaided and promoted reli gion and should therefore, according to Levy's methodology, be called establish ment regimes."). 3. See Pa. Const. of 1776, § 10; Del. Const. of 1776, art. 22; N.C. Const. of 1776, art. XXXII; N.J. Const. of 1776, art. XIX. In Rhode Island, Jews and Catholics were apparently ineligible for citizenship. See Bradley, supra note I, at 29. 4. ThomasJ. Curry, The FirstFreedoms: ChurchandStateinAmerica tothe Passage ofthe First Amendment 221 (1986). 5. See 1Debates on the Adoption ofthe Federal Constitution 326 (Jonathan Ellioted. 1888)[hereinafterElliot's Debates] (emphasis added); 2 Crosskey, supra note I, at 1068, 1073-74; Bradley,supra note I, at 76, 79; DavidA. Anderson, The Origins ofthe Free Press Clause, 30 UCLA L. Rev. 455, 481 n.164 (1983). 6. Dumbauld, supra note 1, at 39, 43 n.37 (discussing events ofAugust 15 and 20, 1789). 7. 3 Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States § 1873 (1833). HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 2 1996-1997 1996] THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE 3 The key point is not simply that, as with the rest ofthe First Amendment, the Establishment Clause limits only Congress and not the states. That point is obvious on the face ofthe Amendment and is confirmed by its legislative history. (It also, of course, has the imprimatur of Chief Justice Marshall's opinion in Barron v. Baltimore.B Nor is the main point exhausted once we recognize ) that state governments are in part the special beneficiaries of, and rights-holders under, the clause. Indeed, the same thing could be said, to some degree, about the Free Speech Clause.9 The special prick of the point is this: the nature of the states' establishment clause right against federal disestablishment makes it quite awk ward to mechanically "incorporate" the clause against the states via the Fourteenth Amendment. Incorporation ofthe Free Speech Clause against states does not negate state legislators' own First Amendment rights to freedom of speech in the legislative assem bly. But incorporation of the Establishment Clause has precisely this kind ofeffect; to apply the clause against a state government is precisely to eliminate its right to choose whether to establish a reli gion-a right explicitly confirmed by the Establishment Clause itself! To put the point a slightly different way, the structural rea sons that counsel caution in attempting to incorporate the Tenth Amendment against the states seem valid here too. The original establishment clause, on a close reading, is not anti-establishment, but pro-states' rights; it is agnostic on the substantive issue of es tablishment versus non-establishment, and simply calls for the is sue to be decided locally. (In this respect it is the American equivalent ofthe European Peace ofAugsburg in 1555 and Treaty ofWestphalia in 1648, decreeing that religious policy would be set locally rather than imperially.) But how can such a local option clause be mechanically incorporated against localities, requiring them to pass no laws (either way!) on the issue of, Le., "respecting," establishment? 10 To my knowledge no scholar or judge has argued for incorpo rating the Tenth Amendment, butfew seem critical of, or even con- 8. 32 U.S. (7 Pet.) 243 (1833). 9. See Akhil Reed Amar, The Bill ofRights as a Constitution, 100 Yale L.J. 1131, 1151 (1991). 10. See Bradley, supra note 1, at 95; Conkle, supra note 1, at 1141; Porth & George, supra note 1, at 136-39. HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 3 1996-1997 4 ROGER WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 2:1 cerned about, the blithe manner in which the Establishment Clause has come to apply against the states. The apparent reason for this lack of concern, and for the Supreme Court's initial deci sion to incorporate the clause, is an assumption that virtually all the provisions ofthe Bill ofRights, except the Tenth Amendment, were designed solely to protect an individual's rights. If this as sumption is true, total incorporation ofthe first nine amendments seems eminently sensible, and wonderfully clean to boot. Unfortu nately, this assumption is false. There is, however, another clean solution to the problem that may well do morejustice to history and structure. The Fourteenth Amendment might best be read as incorporating free exercise, but not establishment, principles against state governments. Like the Speech, Press, Assembly and Petition Clauses, the Free Exercise Clause was paradigmatically about citizens' rights, not states' rights; it thus invites incorporation. Indeed, this clause was spe cially concerned with the plight of minority religions, and thus meshed especially well with the minority-rights thrust ofthe Four teenth Amendment. Thomas Jefferson, often invoked today as a strong opponent of religious establishment, appears to have understood the states' rights aspects of the original establishment clause. While he ar gued for an absolutist interpretation of the First Amendment that the federal government should have nothing to do with reli gion in the states, control of which was beyond Congress's limited delegated powers-he was more willing to flirt with governmental endorsements of religion at the state level, especially where no state coercion would impinge on the freedom of conscience of dis senters. The two ideas were logically connected; it was especially easy to be an absolutist about the federal government's involve ment in religion if one understood that the respective states had broad authority over their citizens' education and morals. Thus, while President Jefferson in 1802 refused to proclaim a day ofreli gious Thanksgiving, he had done just that as Governor Jefferson some 20 years before.l1 In defending his practice to Reverend Sa- 11. Compare Proclamation Appointing a Day of Thanksgiving and Prayer (Nov. 11, 1779),reprinted in 3The PapersofThomasJefferson 177 (Julian P. Boyd ed. 1951), with Letter from Thomas Jefferson to Attorney General Levi Lincoln (Jan. 1, 1802),reprinted in 8The WritingsofThomasJefferson 129(Paul Leicester Ford ed., NewYork, G.P. Putnam's Sons 1897). Seealso SecondInauguralAddress HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 4 1996-1997 1996] THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE 5 muel Miller in 1808, Jefferson quoted both the First and Tenth Amendments, and explained: I am aware that the practice of my [presidential] predeces sors may be quoted. But I have ever believed that the exam ple ofstate executives led to the assumption ofthat authority by the general government, without due examination, which would have discovered that what might be a right in a state government, was a violation ofthat right when assumed by another.12 Interestingly, a virtually identical view was voiced in the First Congress on September 25, 1789-the very day the Bill of Rights cleared both houses. When New Jersey Representative Elias Boudinot introduced a bill recommending "a day of public thanksgiving and prayer," South Carolina's Thomas Tucker rose up in opposition: "[I]t is a religious matter, and as such, is pro scribed to us. If a day of thanksgiving must take place, let it be done by the authority ofthe several States."13 This states' rights understanding helps to explain why the religion clauses and the rights of speech, press and so on, were lumped together into a single amendment. To be sure, there is much truth in a libertarian reading, rooted in conventional wis dom: the Free Exercise Clause flanks the Free Speech Clause to remind us ofthe importance ofprotecting not only political speech (as emphasized by the adjoining Petition and Assembly Clauses) 14 but religious speech toO. This libertarian reading also draws strong support from the history ofthe antebellum and reconstruc tion eras. But this conventional account tends to miss an impor tant federalism dynamic at work in the 1780s. Like the general topic of state religious policy, restrictions on speech and press were seen by many as beyond Congress's enumer 15 ated powers. During the closing days of the Philadelphia Con- (Mar. 4, 1805), reprinted in 8 The Writings ofThomas Jefferson 341 n.1, 344 (sug gesting that states have power over religion where federal government has none). 12. LetterofThomasJeffersonto ReverendSamuelMiller(January 23,1808), reprinted in 5 The Founders' Constitution 98-99 (Philip B. Kurland & Ralph Ler ner eds., 1987). 13. 1 Annals ofCongo 949-50 (Joseph Gales ed., 1789) (1st ed. pagination). 14. See Anderson,supra note 5, at484. Butsee id. at488 (notinganachronism of this reading). See also Murray Dry, Flag Burning and the Constitution, 1990 Sup. Ct. Rev. 69, 72. 15. See generally William T. Mayton, Seditious Libel and the Lost Guarantee ofa Freedom ofExpression, 84 Colum. L. Rev. 91, 117-19 (1984). HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 5 1996-1997 6 ROGER WILliAMS UNNERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 2:1 vention, a proposal explicitly to guarantee "liberty of the Press" quickly went down to defeat after Roger Sherman shrugged it off as "unnecessary-The power of Congress does not extend to the Press."16 During the ratification debates Sherman's one-liner be came the Federalist party line on press freedom, affirmed over and over, not just by Sherman and fellow moderates like Oliver Ells worth, Hugh Williamson, Richard Dobbs Spaight, and Edmund Randolph, but also by strong nationalists like Alexander Hamilton, James Iredell, Charles Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, 17 Noah Webster, and James Wilson. So too, Federalists of all stripes-Madison, Wilson, Iredell, Randolph, Spaight, Ellsworth, and Sherman, for example-declared that the federal government simply had no jurisdiction over religion in the several states. IS Thus, the First Amendment opened with words suggesting an ut ter lack ofenumerated powerto regulate religion in the states or to restrict speech-"Congress shall make no law"-in sharp contrast to the language of later amendments dealing with areas where Congress clearly did enjoy enumeratedArticle I power to "make ... 16. The Records ofthe Federal Convention of 1787, at 617-18 (Max Farrand ed., rev. ed. 1966) [hereinafter Farrand]. 17. See Roger Sherman, ACitizenofNew Haven (II), in Essays on the Consti tution of the United States 237, 239 (Paul Leicester Ford ed., New York, Burt Franklin 1892); Oliver Ellsworth, The Landholder (VI) in id. at 161, 164; Hugh Williamson, Remarks onthe New PlanofGovernment, in id. at 395,398; 4 Elliot's Debates, supra note 5, at 208-09 (Richard Dobbs Spaight); 3 id. at 203-04, 469 (Edmund Randolph); The Federalist No. 84 (Alexander Hamilton); James Iredell, Answers to Mr. Mason's Objections, in Pamphlets on the Constitution of the United States 360-61 (Paul Leicester Ford ed., New York, Burt Franklin 1888); 4 Elliot's Debates, supra note 5, at 259-60 (Charles Pinckney); id. at 315 (Charles CotesworthPinckney); NoahWebster,AnExaminationintothe LeadingPrinciples ofthe FederalConstitution, in Pamphlets onthe Constitutionofthe United States 25,48(PaulLeicesterForded., NewYork, BurtFranklin 1888); 2Elliot's Debates, supra note 5, at 449, 468 (James Wilson); James Wilson, Speech on the Federal Constitution, in Pamphlets on the Constitution ofthe United States 156-57 (Paul Leicester Ford ed., New York, Burt Franklin 1888). At least one leading Anti Federalist agreed with the Federalists on this point. See Letters from the Federal Farmer (IV) in 2 The CompleteAnti-Federalist 250 <HerbertJ. Storing ed., 1981). Fora similar statementin the first Congress, see 2 Bernard Schwartz, The Bill of Rights: A Documentary History 1034-35(1971) (remarks ofJames Jackson) (June 8, 1789). 18. See, e.g., 3 Elliot's Debates, supra note 5, at 93, 330 (James Madison); 2 id. at 455 (James Wilson); 4 id. at 194-95 (James Iredell); 3 id. at 203-04, 469 (Edmund Randolph); 4 id. at 208 (Richard Dobbs Spaight); Oliver Ellsworth, The Landholder(VI) in Essays on the Constitutionofthe UnitedStates,supra note 17, at 164; Schwartz, supra note 17, at 1088 (August 15, 1789) (Roger Sherman). HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 6 1996-1997 1996] THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE 7 law." For example, the Militia and War Power Clauses ofArticle I gave Congress broad power over military matters addressed by the Second and Third Amendments; Congressional authorization of various searches and seizures clearly fell within its explicit power to regulate customs and captures, among other things; and Article I expressly authorized Congress to "constitute tribunals," whose procedures were the main subject ofthe Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, and Eighth Amendments.19 The "Congress shall make no law" Amendment's precise loca tion in the original Bill is also quite illuminating. Recall that the First Congress originally proposed not ten, but twelve amend ments as its Bill of Rights. The First Congress's original First Amendment focused on congressional size and obviously modified Article I, Section 2, and the original Second amended Article I, Sec tion 6, dealing with congressional salary. Then came our First (their Third) Amendment, glossing the Article I, Section 8 cata logue by suggesting that Congress lacked enumerated power to censor expression or regulate state religious policy-a kind of re verse "necessary and proper" clause. Only after this implied gloss on Section 8 was it appropriate to add later amendments implicitly expanding the catalogue ofArticle I, Section 9, many ofwhose pro visions cut across powers that were indeed conferred in Section 8. Seen from this angle, the order ofamendments precisely tracks the order ofthe original Constitution itself-first Section 2, then Sec tion 6, then Section 8, and only then Section 9 and so on. (Later amendments governing the judicial process can also be seen as modifying Article III rules for federal courts; and the last two amendments laid down global rules of construction aimed at all federal powers, not just those of Congress.) When we remember that Madison originally proposed to interweave his amendments into the original Constitution rather than tack them on at the end, it makes sense that the order of amendments would track the or der of the Constitution itself. Ofcourse, the idea that Congress simply lacked Article I enu merated power over various First Amendment domains may seem wholly fanciful today, given the widespread acceptance of expan sive twentieth-century Commerce Clause cases, themselves in- 19. See U.S. Const. art. I, §8, cIs. 11-16 (war, army and militia powers); id. cIs. 1, 3, 11 (customs, commerce and capture powers); id. cl. 9 (power to constitute tribunals). HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 7 1996-1997 8 ROGER WILLIAMS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW [Vol. 2:1 spired by a broad reading of the nineteenth-century classic, McCulloch v. Maryland.20 Reading the Constitution through twentieth-century eyes, we must squint quite hard to see the First Amendment as any different from the seven amendments that fol low it, so far as enumerated powers are concerned. But to avoid anachronism we must ask why so many Federalists cheerfully con ceded a lack of congressional power over press and religion in the states, but failed to make similar concessions in response to other anti-Federalist objections. Is there not a kernel of truth in the widespread eighteenth-century notion that, say, searches and seizures were naturally incidental to-"necessary and proper" for-the power to collect revenue in a way that press censorship and religious regulations were generally not? Vestiges of this eighteenth-century notion can be found even in McCulloch, where ChiefJustice Marshall warned that Congress could not, "under the pretext ofexecuting its powers, pass laws for the accomplishment ofobjects not entrusted to the government...."21 Though this lan guage has lain dormant in recent years, it hints at a stricter read ing of enumerated powers in terms of their natural "objects" or "purposes."22 Under this stricter view, each of the next seven amendments seems to track the natural object of specific enumer ated powers much more closely than does the First. The Senate, at least, appears to have thought so, for there seems to be no other good explanation for its conscious decision to fold certain prohibitions, but not others, into the "Congress shall make no law" category. The subjects covered by our First Amend ment had initially been dealt with by the House ofRepresentatives in two separate amendments. The first addressed religion and opened with the formulation "Congress shall make no law." The second encompassed the rights of speech, press, petition and as- 20. 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316 (1819). 21. Id. at 423. 22. Marshall's approach unsurprisingly resembles the colonists' arguments before 1776thatParliamentcouldenactbillstoregulatetradefor the overallbene fit ofthe empire, but could not use this power pretextually to raise revenues. See Edmund S. Morgan, The Challenge ofThe American Revolution 3-42 (1976). The linkage is unsurprising because the debates prior to 1776 involved, in effect, an early attempt to "constitutionalize" federalism by marking the respective bounda ries of the central and local governments within an extended empire. See Akhil Reed Amar, OfSovereignty and Federalism, 96 Yale L. J. 1425, 1445 (1987); An drew C. McLaughlin, The Background ofAmerican Federalism, 12 Am. Pol. Sci. Rev. 215 (1918). HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 8 1996-1997 1996] THE ESTABLISHMENT CLAUSE 9 sembly, but omitted the "no law" formulation in favor oflanguage more like that of subsequent amendments (today numbered II through VIII).23 Although the Senate merged the two amendments behind closed doors, leaving us with no transcript ofits oral deliberations, it is plausible to presume the merger was motivated by states' rights sentiment. After all, the Constitution had structured the upper house to safeguard the interests of state governments whose legislatures ofcourse directly elected Senators. In respond ing to other aspects of the Bill of Rights proposed by the lower house, the Senate acted true to its states' rights form: the upper house killed "the most valuable" amendment on Madison's list, the presciently numbered Fourteenth, imposing various restrictions on state government. Also suggestive is the extensive consideration the Senate gave to various ideas originating in the Virginia ratify ing convention that Madison had chosen to omit from his proposed package ofamendments. In its formal instrument ofratification, 24 the Virginia convention had expressly listed two (and only two) "es sential rights" that the convention suggested were beyond the enu merated powers "granted" to the federal government: "liberty of conscience, and of the press."25 In keeping with Virginia's view, the Senate first reworded the House's speech amendment so that it too began with the phrase "Congress shall make no law," and then folded this amendment into the only other one that shared this 26 opening formulation. Most importantly, we must recall the precise wording of the First Amendment-"Congress shall make no law . .."-precisely tracking and inverting the precise wording of the Article I Neces sary and Proper Clause: "Congress shall have power ... to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper ...." And we should also note that no state constitution placed press freedoms alongside religion clauses, thus suggesting a federalism-based logic for their conjunction in the First Amendment. Unsurprisingly, Jefferson's absolutist reading of the First Amendment extended beyond the religion clauses to encompass speech and press. Yet here, too, it was an absolutism rooted in 23. Dumbauld, supra note 1, at 213-14. 24. [d. at 47 & n.14. 25. 1 Elliot's Debates, supra note 5, at 327. 26. See Anderson, supra note 5, at 481. HeinOnline -- 2 Roger Williams U. L. Rev. 9 1996-1997
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